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21st September 2017

Connected Regulation – What Are the Legal Issues and Regulatory Roadblocks?

Chapter Meetings

On 21 September 2017, the International Institute of Communication (IIC) held the second of its Brussels Chapter at an event on Smart Cars, hosted by AT&T in Brussels.

The event, entitled ‘Connected Regulation – what are the legal issues and regulatory roadblock?’ has gathered great interest from various industry players and the European Commission. In this second event of our series, we discussed the legal issues arising from the application of the existing EU regulations (covering institutional set-up, road safety, liability, connectivity, data protection, competition, etc) that are potentially relevant to the practical deployment of Smart Cars. A roundtable discussion amongst all the participants tried to map the various converging regulations that become relevant for the operators of a Smart Car and examined the regulatory bottlenecks and challenges.

Technology, in the form of connectivity and autonomy, is bringing its own changes, especially in parts of the developed world. But technology may be advancing faster than the readiness of governments, regulators and current car users to deal with their implications. The discussion focussed on how regulation could be an enabler or a road block for Smart Cars deployment, including on the following issues:

  • Institutional set-up: different authorities will be responsible to regulate different aspects of the deployment of Smart Cars – from road safety authorities to telecoms regulators and municipalities. Lack of coordination could lead to delays in such deployment. Is regulation needed to ensure a coordinated approach which does not lead to diverging outcomes on interrelated issues, such the deployment of the underlying infrastructure (5G) for the provision of connectivity in the car?
  • Road safety: in the UK engaging self-driving mode is currently prohibited on public roads. This is changing – slowly – so that by 2019 UK consumers should be able engage self-driving mode and take their hands off the wheel for up to three minutes – but only on a motorway (highway). In the US, things have progressed further, with the federal government addressing the potential obstacles to adoption presented by differing rules in US states by issuing an automated vehicles policy in September 2016, introducing guidance to states and best practice. But in considering how best to introduce Smart Cars, governments and regulators must have regard to the special circumstance of the transition phase when roads contain both human and autonomous drivers. Over time, humans (drivers, passengers and pedestrians) would also adjust and, hopefully, most of their early anxiety would be laid to rest. But at least for now that anxiety is real. Are regulations necessary or desirable to overcome this anxiety on road safety?
  • Data regulation: there is currently a tension between the regulations applying to data generated in a Smart Cars. In part this tension arises from the convergence of regulations (e.g. car manufacturers could become regulated as telecoms operators under the e-Privacy Regulation rather than the General Data Protection Directive, or under traditional telecoms rules, including on net neutrality and emergency access services). From a different angle, this tension also arises from the clashing of diverging business interests (e.g. insurers and independent repairers want access to the data, whilst car manufacturers have reservations about third party access to ‘their’ data). Additionally, consumers will be looking for reassurance about how secure the data coming off vehicles are. Should regulations have a role to here, or is the reputational and business risk for each brand sufficient?
  • Connectivity: Intel estimates that, by 2020, the average person will generate 1.5 GB a day, while the average Smart Car will produce 4,000 GB a day. Presumably most of that data would never leave the vehicle, but Hitachi estimates that 25 GB16 of data would be uploaded to the cloud per hour. Even if Smart Cars were able (or required by regulators) to roam across home market cellular networks, unless satellite connectivity were also integrated, there would be losses of connectivity – in many rural areas, even in developed countries, there are plenty of holes in cellular connectivity. Should government and industry have to work together increase connectivity to remove a potential obstacle to connected and autonomous vehicles delivering their full benefits?
  • Interoperability: the EU plans to develop a Cooperative Intelligent Transportation System (C-ITS) in 2019 and intends to make 802.11p, a short-range vehicular communication system, the standard for safety-related messages between vehicles. At the same time, communications operators are concerned that this approach may restrict the adoption of more advanced cellular vehicle-to-everything (C-V2X) solutions and are calling for a more technology neutral approach. Should standards be mandated by regulation or left to market forces?
  • Competition: even if one accepts that market forces should be left free to decide the successful business models of the Smart Car, regulators may need to remain vigilant to avoid anti-competitive outcomes, as supplier-customer relationships (e.g. communications provider and car manufacturer) become horizontal relationship between competitors (both communications provider and car manufacturer provide connectivity to the Smart Car). Are the existing boundaries of what is permissible under competition law flexible enough to allow pro-competitive collaboration or will they act as an obstacle?

Many of the answers to these questions will ultimately depend on the policy choices that are being made today by governments and legislators. Our next and last event in this series will therefore explore the question whether global policies are sufficiently connected to enable the deployment of Smart Cars.

Hosted by Antonio Amendola (AT&T Executive Director, Brussels Chapter Committee), and moderated by Francesco Liberatore (Squire Patton Boggs Partner, Brussels Chapter Chairman), under Chatham House Rule.

Speakers

Antonio Amendola Executive Director of International External Affairs, AT&T

Antonio Amendola, Executive Director of International External Affairs for AT&T is based in Brussels, Mr Amendola represents the interests of AT&T with European government officials, the EU Institutions, key industry associations and civil society groups on EU and international matters in the telecommunications, media, technology, and digital media industries.

Mr Amendola joined AT&T from the Italian Government where he acted as senior advisor to the Secretary of State of Economic Development. In this role, he led a team of communications experts in preparation for the Italian Presidency of the EU Council (from July 2014). In addition, Mr Amendola was a member of the Governmental Advisory Committee of ICANN and Chair of an inter-ministerial Committee on internet domain name issues.

Prior to this Mr Amendola spent 15 years at AGCOM, the Italian Communication Authority, where he held several roles including senior advisor to the executive leadership on policy, media regulation and regulatory matters. In this capacity he participated in negotiations with the European Parliament and Commission as a Seconded National Expert. He also acted as vice chair of ENISA’s international Group of Experts for Internet Security Regulation.

Mr Amendola is a law graduate from Bari Law School and has lectured at Rome University’s Faculty of Communication Science.

Eddy Hartog Head of Unit for Smart Mobility and Living, DG Communication Networks, Content and Technology

Eddy Hartog has Dutch nationality and was born and raised in Utrecht (the Netherlands). Mr Hartog obtained a degree in political economics at the Erasmus University (Rotterdam) and subsequently a post-graduate degree at the College of Europe (Bruges, Belgium). He has worked in the European Commission since 1989, first in Trade policy, then in Regional policy and in Maritime policy and lately in Information Society and Media policy. Mr Hartog is a Head of Unit since 2003. His present responsibility (since July 2016) is Head of Unit for Smart Mobility and Living in DG Communication Networks, Content and Technology. He is married and has two daughters.

Elisabeth Opie International Technology Lawyer, Office of Elisabeth Opie

Elisabeth Opie is an International Technology Lawyer. Ms Opie is also a registered European Lawyer with almost 20 years’ international experience in the global innovation system. She has worked on a diverse range of technology-related matters involving industry, funding entities, governments, and research organisations. Her office provides advice across a broad range issues facing technology-centric companies, with practice areas covering international policy, commercial transactions, and dispute resolution with a strong IP focus.

Ms Opie is currently also Adjunct Professor at Humboldt University, Berlin, lecturing on international commercial arbitration. She holds a Master of Laws (International Trade/Intellectual Property) and a Master of Commercial Law.

Francesco Liberatore Partner, Squire Patton Boggs (UK) LLP

Francesco Liberatore advises clients on all aspects of the application of communications and competition law.

On the behavioural side, Mr Liberatore’s practice includes bringing and defending all types of regulatory and competition disputes before Ofcom, the Competition and Markets Authority and the European Commission, as well as managing internal investigations, dawn raids, and counselling on compliance issues and various commercial agreements. On the transactional side, Mr Liberatore handles UK and EU merger control due diligence and filings, as well as coordinating multijurisdictional merger control strategies. He also advises private equity investors, banks, and other financial investors on arbitrage opportunities.

Mr Liberatore’s litigation experience includes representing clients in matters before the Competition Appeal Tribunal, the High Court of Justice and the European Courts.

He has authored several legal publications, including the UK Chapter of the International Telecommunications Law handbook (Juris Publishing).

Mr Liberatore has been listed as a leading practitioner in Chambers UK, Chambers Global, The Legal 500 UK and Who’s Who Legal. He is a guest lecturer at King’s College London and a member of Justice.

Event details
Date:
21st September 2017
Location:
Brussels, Belgium
Region:
Europe
Chapter:
Europe
RUE DU LUXEMBOURG 47,
1050 BRUSSELS

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